Corvinus
Corvinus

Informational autocracy at work : Evidence from Hungarian anti-immigration campaigns

Ádám, Zoltán ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4388-5836 and Golovics, József (2025) Informational autocracy at work : Evidence from Hungarian anti-immigration campaigns. New Perspectives . DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/2336825X251387899

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/2336825X251387899


Abstract

The paper examines the transformation of Hungarian popular attitudes on immigration throughout the 2010s, with particular reference to the 2015 European refugee crisis. Using a before-and-after study design combined with a potential outcome framework with Eurobarometer survey data, we analyze pre- and post-crisis shifts and compare Hungary to the broader EU. Our findings show that Hungarian attitudes toward immigrants from non-European backgrounds became significantly more negative during the crisis, diverging from trends observed in the EU as a whole. Conducting large scale anti-immigrant and anti-EU campaigns during and after the crisis, the Hungarian government leveraged the attitudinal change, demonstrated by settlement-level electoral data. Following Guriev and Treisman (2019, 2020), we regard this as ‘informational autocracy’ at work: a democratically elected autocratic government employs broad-based propaganda campaigns to secure popular support.

Item Type:Article
Divisions:Institute of Economics
Subjects:Media and communication
Political science
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/2336825X251387899
ID Code:11961
Deposited By: MTMT SWORD
Deposited On:11 Nov 2025 16:03
Last Modified:11 Nov 2025 16:03

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